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Chapter 3. Visualizing Data

I believe that visualization is one of the most powerful means of achieving personal goals.

Harvey Mackay

A fundamental part of the data scientist’s toolkit is data visualization. Although it is very easy to create visualizations, it’s much harder to produce good ones.

There are two primary uses for data visualization:

To explore data

To communicate data

In this chapter, we will concentrate on building the skills that you’ll need to start exploring your own data and to produce the visualizations we’ll be using throughout the rest of the book. Like most of our chapter topics, data visualization is a rich field of study that deserves its own book. Nonetheless, I’ll try to give you a sense of what makes for a good visualization and what doesn’t.

matplotlib

A wide variety of tools exist for visualizing data. We will be using the matplotlib library, which is widely used (although sort of showing its age). If you are interested in producing elaborate interactive visualizations for the web, it is likely not the right choice, but for simple bar charts, line charts, and scatterplots, it works pretty well.

As mentioned earlier, matplotlib is not part of the core Python library.
With your virtual environment activated (to set one up, go back to “Virtual Environments” and follow the instructions), install it using this command:

python -m pip install matplotlib

We will be using the matplotlib.pyplot module. In its simplest use, pyplot maintains an internal ...

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